On January 14, 2016, arrestees in New Orleans who were declared eligible to receive appointed counsel from the Orleans Parish Public Defender’s Office (OPD) but were placed on a waiting list, sued in a class action OPD and the Louisiana State Public Defender office under 42 U.S.C. s. 1983 for ...
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On January 14, 2016, arrestees in New Orleans who were declared eligible to receive appointed counsel from the Orleans Parish Public Defender’s Office (OPD) but were placed on a waiting list, sued in a class action OPD and the Louisiana State Public Defender office under 42 U.S.C. s. 1983 for violating their Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. OPD’s refusal to represent Plaintiffs meant that they remained in jail without counsel. Plaintiff class seeks attorney’s fees and a declaration that OPD’s placement of class members on a waiting list for an indefinite amount of time violates their Constitutional rights to counsel, due process, and equal protection.

OPD refused to accept Plaintiffs as clients due to budgetary shortages and excessive caseloads. After hearings in which OPD discussed its budgetary crisis in late 2015, the Chief District Defender announced it would start declining certain felony cases in mid-January of 2016. The withdrawals would occur at a defendant’s first appearance before the magistrate. Plaintiffs credit OPD’s situation to the State of Louisiana’s underfunding of its public defender system.

Arrestees in New Orleans who were declared eligible to receive appointed counsel from the Orleans Parish Public Defender’s Office (OPD) but were placed on a waiting list for an indefinite amount of time.

The Third Generation of Indigent Defense Litigation
New York University Review of Law and Social ChangeDate: 2009 By: Cara Drinan (Columbus School of Law, Catholic University Faculty) Citation: 33 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 427 (2009)[ Detail ][ External Link ]

Indigent Defense Reform: The Role of Systemic Litigation in Operationalizing the Gideon Right to CounselDate: May 7, 2007 By: Vidhya K. Reddy (Washington University in St. Louis Law Student)[ Detail ][ PDF ]